This picture above must be a fake, because Met Office supercomputers tell us that the UK actually looks like this :

24 March 2010

Mike Calnan, the National Trust’s head of gardens and parks, said thepredictions were based on computer models generated by the Met Office Hadley Centre.

‘We looked at gardens in southern France and southern Portugal and, bearing in mind what we can grow in this country in mild locations, we came up with a list of probably things we could grow in the future,’ he said

He added: ‘The Met Office are saying that despite the recent concerns about the science, they are very sure about the underlying science.

Currently wind farms supply between 0-4 GW (approx) of the country’s required 42-50GW (approx). (http://www.gridwatch.templar.co.uk/)
In the UK from September 2012, 87 (4,907 MW) wind farm schemes are currently under construction, while another 277 (5,796 MW) projects have planning consent and 358 (over 10 GW) are in planning awaiting approval.
The UK Government committed the UK to meeting a requirement of 15% of all electricity from renewables by 2020. The group RenewableUK estimates that this will require 35–40% of the UK’s electricity to be generated from renewable sources by that date, to be met largely by 33–35 gigawatts (GW) of installed wind capacity.

Soon every square foot of the UK will be within ear-shot or sight of one of these ugly bird-killers, and still there will not be enough.

Years from now, archeologists will be stumped by the high rate of bird skeletons found under known Fossil-fuel burning & nuclear plant locations, not knowing the plants were built on locations where wind farms were torn down.

As I know a few archaeologists – if the future ones are as knowledgeable, logical and bright, they will conclude that the ancient peoples had a strange long forgotten ritual were naked young maidens danced and sung before the procreation ceremony. Part of this rite involved sacrificing the (now) extinct flying animals on vast metal paddles that were ignited with the energy derived from the nuclear reactors.